The numbers say wrestling. Not sure it's even close if you look at the top 5 by division over time.

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Numbers are biased since a lot more people practice wrestling. If BJJ were as big as wrestling is in collegiate sports I bet the numbers would be much closer. As of now most people start jiu jitsu as a hobby

both are mandatory, I don't know a single fighter who doesn't train at least submission defense and wrestling.
it also depends on the ruleset, as I think the unified rules favor wrestlers, as they are designed by americans and primarily for an american audience.
soccer kicks and knees on the ground (although knees can be usefull for a wrestler in side control or north south) are bad for wrestlers, as we saw more wrestlers being kneed after a stuffed TD attempt than wrestlers kneeing in top position on the ground in orgs where it is allowed (Pride & one FC)
one could argue that the 2 UFC GOATS, Silva and GSP, did not have a wretsling base (altought GSP wrestled a lot) and Fedor the absolute GOAT in my opinion has a sambo base which is wrestling AND submissions

It's not a fair question since like 90% of the roster are American, and almost all American MMA fighters are wrestlers.
Statistically they should be dominating the UFC atm. There's like 300 hundred more of them.

If there were 200 Russians in the UFC atm, I'd bet dollars to donuts there'd be more Russian champions.

Pure style? Go back and watch the early fights of MMA. Wrasslers in their purest have no way to finish while BJJ....well.

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Dan Severn and Ken Shamrock say hello lol.

I will admit that it took wresting a while to adapt to MMA because the purpose of wrestling is to pin your opponent, but after they figured out ground and pound and the RNC, it became alot more dominant.